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Grands Moulins PANTIN

The bank for a changing world GRANDS MOULINS

Monumental icon of the industrial heritage of north-eastern , Grands Moulins de Pantin (Pantin flour mills) ceased milling activities in July 2003. At the end of 2009, following three years of heavy work, a new life opened up for Pantin mills when BNP Paribas Securities Services 3,200 staff employees moved in from six different buildings in Paris.

Grands Moulins and Canal de l’Ourcq in the years 1920-1930 GRANDS MOULINS

BNP Paribas Securities Services, a wholly-owned subsidiary of BNP Paribas Group, is a leading global custodian and securities services provider to all participants in the investment cycle including the buy-side, sell-side, corporates and issuers.

In the past, Pantin area was well-known for the old Roman road leading to Germany which ran through it and its lush countryside with market gardens and farmland. On April 5 1880, Abel Stanislas Leblanc, a miller of the Brie region, bought a plot of land and built a mill which started up in 1882. At this time the town of Pantin had many advantages: it was close to the Parisian markets and enjoyed convenient transport facilities with Canal de l’Ourcq and Paris-Strasbourg railway. There was also a large pool of labour locally.

Grands Moulins de Pantin changed of ownership several times because of the concentration of the milling business after World War I. Eventually, they were taken over by Grands Moulins de Strasbourg (Strasbourg Mills) in 1921.

Grands Moulins and Canal de l’Ourcq today GRANDS MOULINS

The new mill project. Eugene Haug’s elevation drawing, 1923 GRANDS MOULINS

From 1923 onwards, construction of what has become load the sacks of flour onto barges. This project, which emblematic buildings began under the direction of was a huge undertaking for its time, is firmly rooted Alsacian architect Eugène Haug. These include the mill, in the neo-regional architecture style. The skeleton is the grain silo, the 47 metre high water tower shaped like made of reinforced concrete and the masonry is of pale a belfry, and the boiler room equipped with a powerful brickwork, with sloping lofts. Later on, in 1930, a quay is Babcock & Wilcox boiler which generated electricity added and year 1933 sees the construction of the bakery for the mill. The transporter bridge, one of the most together with its own laboratory and school. inventive elements of the mill, is designed and built to

Badcock & Wilcox boiler GRANDS MOULINS

During World War II, on 19 August 1944, a bomb blows up in a barge sailing on Canal de l’Ourcq, stopping all activity at the mill until 1948. Parisian architect Léon Bailly is given the job of reconstructing the mill which quickly becomes a model of modern industry, achieving outstanding results, including high levels of exports.

During the two decades from 1970 to 1990, growing competition and falling consumption of bread in led the mill to start up a new venture in industrial bakery. But these changes proved inadequate to save the business. In 1994, Soufflet Group, one of the major cereal traders in France, took over Grands Moulins, thus becoming the top flour-milling company in France. However, the new owners were unable to halt the decline and Pantin mills finally closed down in July 2003.

In 2001, Soufflet Group joined with Pantin local authorities in a bid to ensure a future for this site which was so steeped in history. As a result, architectural office Reichen & Robert Associés, which specialises in converting industrial sites, was commissioned to refurbish Grands Moulins de Pantin and their one and a half hectare (3.7 acres) site.

The renovation was designed to the highest technical specifications. The architects were able to preserve the famous Grands Moulins silhouette, including the walkways and the transporter bridge, while still creating 50,000 m2 of office space for BNP Paribas Securities Haug’s brick façades vs Reichen & Robert Associés’ glass walls Services. The imposing Babcock & Wilcox boiler, together GRANDS MOULINS

with its gauges, has been restored to its former glory. The internal courtyard was restored exactly as it was before with its original cobblestones and rails.

This successful large-scale conversion of a former industrial site into a service-sector complex has received a HQE – Haute Qualité Environnementale – certificate, attesting to its high environmental quality. A project was also set up to involve staff in the development process, taking a “campus”-style approach. In fact it was one of the employees who suggested the theme of the five continents for naming the five buildings. Europe, Asia, Oceania, Africa and America buildings thus came into existence, each decorated in an appropriate manner.

The arrival of BNP Paribas Securities Services global business line in the heart of the town of Pantin has significantly boosted the already substantial BNP Paribas presence in the Seine-Saint-Denis department, a suburb on the outskirts of north-eastern Paris. BNP Paribas has now become the number one employer in the département and has taken steps to further develop partnerships with local authorities, charity organisations and social economy enterprises. This commitment to corporate social responsibility can be clearly seen in initiatives such as Projet Banlieues – a project to foster development in underprivileged neighbourhoods which has been sponsored by BNP Paribas Foundation and the Bank’s Retail branch network since 2006. Lobby of one of the five buildings. Designer: Didier Gomez Photos p. 3, 5 and 7: Adeline Bommart • Photos p. 2 and 4: Archives Municipales de Pantin Photos p. 3, 5 and 7: Adeline Bommart • 2 4: Archives BNP Paribas Group Heritage & Historical Archives • Printed on paper sourced from sustainable forests • 2016 •sustainable forests Archives from Heritage & Historical Printed on paper sourced Group BNP Paribas Cover photo: canal de l’Ourcq front view (Adeline Bommart) • Back photo: detail from a flour sack (Archives Municipales de Pantin) Municipales de a flour sack (Archives view (Adeline Bommart) • Back photo: detail from front de l’Ourcq photo: canal Cover

The bank for a changing world